Margie Haack

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Sandy
2,286 books | 136 friends

Ben
Ben
2,713 books | 154 friends

Jenni S...
2,931 books | 535 friends

Elisabe...
1,214 books | 216 friends

Bob
Bob
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Timothy...
671 books | 125 friends

Matthew...
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Skeppinga
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Margie Haack

Goodreads Author


Born
Warroad, Minnesota, The United States
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Member Since
January 2008

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Average rating: 4.38 · 37 ratings · 4 reviews · 4 distinct works
The Exact Place

4.30 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 2012
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No Place: A Desert Pilgrima...

4.36 avg rating — 11 ratings
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This Place: A Few Notes fro...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 3 ratings
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The Exact Place: A Search f...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings2 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Margie’s Recent Updates

Margie is now friends with Rebecca Schwen
Margie rated a book it was amazing
Shopping for Porcupine by Seth Kantner
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Beautifully written. Kantner has a long standing respect for the Inupiaq ways. From the inside flap, I quote an endorsement - written better than I can: ...cold nights on caribou hides, swimming in the ice floes for wounded water fowl, , home schooli ...more
Margie has read
Ordinary Wolves[ORDINARY WOLVES][Paperback] by SethKantner
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A great novel. Two incompatible worlds collide when Cutuk Hawcley grows up in the Inupiaq culture. He was pummeled and jeered for being white. When he left for the city as a young man he was was rejected for being too native forcing him to choose bet ...more
Margie rated a book it was amazing
A Thousand Trails Home by Seth Kantner
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I discovered Seth Kantner this summer and have read four of his books. They are all superb. Kantner was born in the Arctic far from any village to parents who were subsistence dwellers. In 1,000 Trails Home, his parents' sod igloo was perched on the ...more
More of Margie's books…
Diana Athill
“I am not sure that digging in our past guilts is a useful occupation for the very old, given that one can do so little about them. I have reached a stage at which one hopes to be forgiven for concentrating on how to get through the present.”
Diana Athill, Somewhere Towards the End

Diana Athill
“You don't always have to go so far as to murder your darlings – those turns of phrase or images of which you felt extra proud when they appeared on the page – but go back and look at them with a very beady eye. Almost always it turns out that they'd be better dead. (Not every little twinge of satisfaction is suspect – it's the ones which amount to a sort of smug glee you must watch out for.”
Diana Athill

Diana Athill
“All through my sixties I felt I was still within hailing distance of middle age, not safe on its shores, perhaps, but navigating its coastal waters. My seventieth birthday failed to change this because I managed scarcely to notice it, but my seventy-first did change it. Being 'over seventy' is being old: suddenly I was aground on that fact and saw that the time had come to size it up.”
Diana Athill, Somewhere Towards the End

Zack Eswine
“Every human being begins at the beginning, as his fathers did, with the same difficulties and pleasures, the same temptations, the same problems of good and evil, the same inward conflict, the same need to learn how to live, the same need to ask what life means.”
Zack Eswine, Preaching to a Post-Everything World: Crafting Biblical Sermons That Connect with Our Culture

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